An Explanation of Luther's Small Catechism

The Project Gutenberg eBook of An Explanation of Luther's Small Catechism, by Joseph Stump
E-text prepared by Charles Aldarondo, Keren Vergon, David King, and Project Gutenberg Distributed Proofreaders
A HANDBOOK FOR THE CATECHETICAL CLASS: AN OUTLINE AND ANALYSIS FOR THE PASTOR'S ORAL INSTRUCTION, AND A SUMMARY FOR THE CATECHUMENS' STUDY AND REVIEW AT HOME BY JOSEPH STUMP, D.D.
1910
CONTENTS
This book aims to present both an analysis of Luther's Small Catechism and a clear, concise, yet reasonably full explanation of its contents. It is an attempt, upon the basis of twenty years' experience and a study of the literature of the subject, to meet the peculiar wants of the catechetical class in our Lutheran Church in America. The object of the book is twofold: first, to furnish an outline of teaching which the pastor may use as a guide in his oral explanation and questioning; and secondly, to furnish a sufficiently complete summary by means of which the catechumens may review the lesson and fix its salient points in their minds. No text-book can, of course, adequately supply the parenetical side of the catechetical instruction or take the place of the living exposition by the pastor. But it can and should support his work, so that what he explains at one meeting may not be forgotten before the next meeting, but may be fixed in the minds of the catechumens by study at home.
Since the task of the pastor in catechization is not only to impart religious instruction, but to impart it on the basis of that priceless heritage of our Church, Luther's Small Catechism, the explanation here offered follows the catechism closely. The words of the catechism are printed in heavy-faced type and are used as headings wherever possible; and thus the words of the catechism may be traced as a thread running through the entire explanation.
Wherever he deemed it necessary, the author has added a fuller explanation of the text of the catechism than that which Luther gives, and has supplemented its contents with such additional matter as the needs of our catechumens require. He does not agree with those catechetical writers who maintain that the pastor, in his catechization, must confine himself to an explanation of Luther's explanation . Such a principle would exclude from the catechetical class much which our catechumens should be taught. But all such additional matters are introduced under an appropriate head as an organic part of the whole explanation, thus preserving its unity.

Martin Luther
Joseph Stump
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2006-02-01

Темы

Lutheran Church -- Catechisms -- English

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